UM Trustee Wayne Chaplin, JD ’82, Makes Gift to Miami Law

CORAL GABLES, Fla.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

To help offset the rising cost of legal education, Wayne Chaplin, JD 82, has made a generous contribution to the University of Miami School of Law to create the Chaplin Challenge. Under the terms of the grant, Chaplin has agreed to match, dollar for dollar, each new eligible contribution made to new or existing scholarship funds between Sept. 1 and Dec. 31 of this year, as long as funds are available. The Chaplin Challenge will be used as a match to double any new donations directed to scholarships. Multi-year pledges to establish new scholarships are eligible for this match, with certain limitations.

Chaplin, a two-time graduate of the University of Miami, is president and chief operating officer of Southern Wine & Spirits of America, the countrys leading distributor of wines and spirits. He also serves as president of the SWS Charitable Foundation, Inc., and as director of the Wayne & Arlene Chaplin Family Foundation.

A dedicated supporter of the University of Miami, he is vice chair of the Board of Trustees and chairs Miami Laws Momentum2 campaign and its Visiting Committee. In addition to his generous contributions to the School of Law, Chaplin has supported the Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer, the Leonard M. Miller School of Medicine, and the Department of Athletics. Through the SWS Charitable Foundation, Inc., the Chaplin Family Endowed Scholarship was established at Miami Law in 2004.

The School of Law plans to reach out to alumni, donors and friends to help match the Chaplin Challenge grant. To make a contribution, click here https://advancement.miami.edu/netcommunity/sslpage.aspx?pid=748

Momentum2: The Breakthrough Campaign for the University of Miami seeks to advance learning, elevate scholarship, and make bold strides in health care in the community, across the country, and around the world. Momentum2 comes on the heels of the institutions record-breaking Momentum: The Campaign for the University of Miami, which concluded at the end of 2007 and raised more than $1.4 billion for endowed chairs and professorships, scholarships, facilities, academic and medical programs, and other initiatives. http://www.miami.edu/momentum2

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UM Trustee Wayne Chaplin, JD ’82, Makes Gift to Miami Law

Parents, Communities, Private Sector And Alumni To Be Educational Partners

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September 29, 2012 20:06 PM

Parents, Communities, Private Sector And Alumni To Be Educational Partners

PUTRAJAYA, Sept 29 (Bernama) -- Deputy Prime Minister Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin said that the Ministry of Education would ensure the involvement of parents, communities, the private sector and alumni as educational partners.

Muhyiddin, who is also Education Minister, said the move has been identified as an important catalyst to propel the nation's quality of education to greater heights.

"The Ministry will develop comprehensive tool-kits to be implemented next year to provide better guidance, particularly on how schools can create better cooperation with parents, communities and the private sector," he said at the launch of Sekolah Alam Shah's Alumni Charity Expedition, here Saturday.

Among the other steps taken would be to increase the participation of parents in assisting their children's performance online and obtaining feedback from Parent-Teacher Associations (PTA) regarding the implementation of curriculums.

"The plan aims to encourage PTAs and local communities to widen their focus from contributing additional funds for student activities to develop parent and community led educational programmes," he said.

The deputy prime minister also witnessed the signing of a Memorandum of Understanding between the Alam Shah school and Allianze University College of Medical Sciences to offer its students RM5 million worth of scholarships or loans.

-- BERNAMA

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Parents, Communities, Private Sector And Alumni To Be Educational Partners

University set to recognize eight alumni

STEUBENVILLE - Eight Franciscan University of Steubenville alumni will be honored at the annual Alumni Awards Banquet and Ceremony slated Friday in the J.C. Williams Center.

A pre-dinner reception begins in the Atrium at 6 p.m., followed by the banquet dinner and ceremony at 7 p.m. in the Tony and Nina Gentile Gallery.

The event recognizes the professional achievements and service to the church and society of Franciscan alumni for many decades.

The university has announced this year's recipients are:

The Rev. Joseph Meagher, Class of 1984, who is receiving the Bishop John King Mussio Award for his service to the Archdiocese of Newark, his involvement in the Pro-Life movement and his ministry to young adults and diocesan seminarians.

Mary Grace (Kniola) Landrum, Class of 1972, who is receiving the Dr. John J. Carrigg Award for her work with youth of Texas as a teacher and special education specialist and for launching her own consulting company to train educational leaders.

John Henricks, Class of 1991, who is receiving the Alumni Citizenship Award for his work in the public square as past director of government relations for the Family Research Council, and currently in the same position for the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops.

Bobby Aborn, Class of 2012, and Christi Aborn, Class of 2009, who are receiving the Rose M. DeFede Faithful Franciscan Award for their service to Franciscan University of Steubenville students by acting as household coordinators, mission trip coordinators, marriage preparation assistants, athletic coaches and hosts of the Dinner for Twelve Strangers.

Dr. Adam Berman, Class of 1994, who is receiving the Father Dan Egan Award for his work as an expert cardiologist specializing in complex arrhythmia ablation, and for medical research he is conducting in conjunction with two leading medical centers.

Michael Kehoe, Class of 1968, who is receiving the professor Edward J. Kelly Award for his work in the telecommunications industry, rising to executive levels with AT&T, as well as his involvement with numerous civic, educational, and charitable boards such as the Center for Corporate Citizenship at Boston College.

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Alumnus Supports New Medical Education Building with $1.5M Gift

Newswise Case Western Reserve School of Medicine announces a $1.5 million commitment from alumnus Michael D. Eppig, MD, and his wife Ruth Eppig. The Eppigs gift will help fund a new medical education and research building that will serve as the School of Medicines headquarters. Dean Pamela B. Davis, MD, PhD, announced the gift during the universitys Alumni Weekend, at which Dr. Eppig celebrated his 35th medical school class reunion.

Earlier in the week, the university announced $20 million in gifts, $10 million each, from the Mt. Sinai Health Care Foundation and the Cleveland Foundation. As a result of the momentum these gifts generated, Dr. and Mrs. Eppig decided to step up and announce their support for the project.

Ruth and I are honored to help realize Dean Davis vision for the future of the School of Medicine. As Clevelanders, we see how important the School of Medicine is to the local medical sector and community as a whole, says Dr. Eppig. We are proud to help provide the modern space this stellar academic program deserves.

The planned 160,000 square-foot education and research facility will incorporate the most modern technology, teaching and laboratory techniques. Academic spaces will mirror core curriculum elements, such as technologically enhanced small-group learning rooms, modern anatomy labs, wired lecture halls and independent study spaces. A key element will be the Mt. Sinai Skills and Simulation Center, which will be prominently located in the new facility. It also will serve as the home office of the Weatherhead Institute for Family Medicine and Community Health and a physical base for the institutes community-engaged research and programs.

A new building will allow the School of Medicine to increase class sizes to a level that meets the request of the Association of American Medical Colleges to help meet projected physician demands nationwide.

In 2008, the Liaison Committee on Medical Education accreditation team called our new Western Reserve2 Curriculum (implemented in 2006) the "class of the field." Unfortunately, the same report cited the schools facilities as a major shortcoming. Existing buildings do not provide the technical and technological resources required to execute a 21st-century curriculum. Reaccreditation will begin in 2016, with the expectation that a building project will be underway at that time.

Mike and Ruth have stepped up as the first individual supporters of our long overdue building project. Mikes experience as an alumnus of our school and subsequent successful career as an orthopaedic spine surgeon, bring special meaning to their support. They are literally passing on the gift of best-in-class education to future generations of physicians and researchers, says Pamela B. Davis, MD, PhD, dean of the School of Medicine and vice president for medical affairs, Case Western Reserve University.

Dr. and Mrs. Eppig are long-time supporters of the School of Medicine, the family having previously funded the Mary Ann Swetland Center for Environmental Health and provided support to build Sears Tower at the School of Medicine in recognition of Mrs. Eppigs grandparents Lester and Ruth Sears.

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About Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine

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Alumnus Supports New Medical Education Building with $1.5M Gift

Brother Jean Sobert, a fixture at Brother Martin High School for 36 years, dies at age 75

"He had a great sense of ... warmth and caring, that came across more than anything else. People responded to that. He genuinely loved people."

Brother Jean Sobert, S.C., a Brother of the Sacred Heart, died Sept. 23 at age 75. Brother Jean was a force in Catholic higher education in New Orleans for almost 40 years.

Brother Jean was born Henry J. Sobert, in Labadieville. He entered the Brothers of the Sacred Heart in 1953. He started his career in education as a teacher at the Brothers' school St. Stanislaus in Bay St. Louis, Miss., in 1957. He served as vocation director for the New Orleans Province from 1960-1968.

His 37-year career in New Orleans started with one year at St. Aloysius High School, and 36 years at Brother Martin High School on Elysian Fields Avenue in Gentilly, a school formed by the 1969 merger of two Brothers of the Sacred Heart schools, St. Aloysius and Cor Jesu High School. Brother Jean served as guidance counselor, director of student activities, director of admissions and director of development and alumni.

Brother Jean "had a deep sense of the importance of Catholic education in the lives of young people," said Brother Ronald Talbot, S.C., provincial of the Brothers' New Orleans Province. "He had a unique ability to convey to them a sense of caring and concern that made the role of Catholic education real in their lives.

"People trusted him," Brother Ronald said. "People valued his advice. He had a keen sense of understanding what people were thinking and the real issues they were dealing with."

Brother Ivy LeBlanc, S.C., a longtime friend and colleague, said Brother Jean "made every person he came in contact with feel that they were unique and totally important in that moment. He put people at ease. He had a great sense of welcoming and hospitality, a sense of warmth and caring, that came across more than anything else. People responded to that. He genuinely loved people."

Brother Jean also "had a tremendous memory for names," Brother Ivy said. "He could meet you once and remember you forever.

"If you're a 13-year-old kid new in a big school, to have this great big guy with a big toothy grin come up to you and know you and know your name -- that can make a real difference in a kid's life," Brother Ivy said. "And he did it over and over again. And those kids grew into adults, and they never forgot his kindness."

Brother Jean is survived by a sister, Jane Sobert Nance, and her husband Steve Nance of Centennial, Colo.; a niece, Jennifer Brummell; a nephew, Eric Nance; and great-nieces and great-nephews.

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Brother Jean Sobert, a fixture at Brother Martin High School for 36 years, dies at age 75

GC Native Wins Grant At Julliard School

Armand Ranjbaran of Garden City is one of five Julliard School students and alumni to receive a newly created grant that will help support innovative projects in the 2012-13 season.

The competitive application process took place in the Spring of 2012, and is a component of Juilliards curriculum drive to add entrepreneurial courses and opportunities across all its disciplines.

Ranjbaran will be working with two other winners, singers John Brancy and Tobias Greenhalgh (both graduating in 2013) to create Operation Superpower which uses classical music as a means for students of all ages to discover and develop their talents, or superpowers exploring the values of courage, hope, honesty, imagination, and friendship, while addressing the issue of bullying. The project will also help symphony orchestras build new audiences at the grassroots level. For additional information or to make a donation to Operation Superpower, visit http://www.fracturedatlas.org/site/fiscal/profile? id=5409.

The Jonathan Madrigano Entrepreneurship Grant is open to individual or group applicants who are current students or recent graduates of The Juilliard School. Entrepreneurial ventures may include but are not limited to performance projects, business ventures, recording projects, services, online platforms, products, films, interdisciplinary endeavors, and educational initiatives. Through a detailed project description, applicants may request a grant amount up to $4,000 to fund their projects that should address issues such as community or market value, competitive advantage, world impact, and resource availability. Grantees are obliged to publicly present their projects and perform one creative act of kindness at the New York University Langone Medical Center within the academic year.

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GC Native Wins Grant At Julliard School

Gazette.Net: Names & Faces

Howard

Osiris Therapeutics of Columbia named Hans Klingemann a director, succeeding Gregory H. Barnhill, who died. Klingemann is director of the bone marrow and stem cell transplant program at Tufts Medical Center in Boston and a professor of medicine at Tufts University Medical School.

Chrysalis Holdings of Fulton named Joseph J. Murin chairman, succeeding Paul Thompson III, who remains on the board. Chrysalis also named Murin president of its NewDay USA. Previously, Murin was president of the Government National Mortgage Association, CEO at National Real Estate Information Services, and co-founder and vice chairman of the Collingwood Group.

The Maryland Association of Realtors named David McIlvaine Sr. its 2012 Realtor of the Year. McIlvaine is an associate broker for Keller Williams Select Realtors in Ellicott City.

CCS Mid-Atlantic of Columbia named Roxann Gardner of Ellicott City an account manager. Previously, Gardner was sales director at Fairfield Inn & Suites and president of Network Referral Group. CCS also named Win Anderson a sales representative for Virginia.

Frederick

Mount St. Marys University of Emmitsburg named William E. Davies of Harrisburg, Pa., vice president for business and finance. Previously, Davies was CFO and treasurer at the Milton Hershey School and Hershey Trust, and also worked for Hershey Entertainment & Resorts.

Montgomery

Capital Bank of Rockville named Edward Barry CEO, succeeding Stephen Ashman, who remains chairman. Previously, Barry worked for Capital One Bank, Bank of America and Ernst & Young.

Miller, Miller & Canby of Rockville named Helen Whelan a principal in its estates and trusts practice group. Previously, Whelan practiced with Elville & Associates.

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Gazette.Net: Names & Faces

Key Medical Device Executive Joins Breast Cancer Technology Business Advisory Board, Nola Masterson

RENO, Nev., Sept. 26, 2012 /PRNewswire/ --First Warning Systems, Inc. announces the addition of Nola Masterson, to the First Warning Advisory Board as Senior Business and Strategy Advisor. Mrs. Master provides C-level expertise to FWS, focusing on strategic inputs and guidance. Ms. Masterson is a biotechnology industry leader and forward thinker with more than 35 years of business experience in the life sciences industry and in venture capital investment. Currently, she is Managing Director of Science Futures Management Company, LLC. (sciencefuturesinc.com), a 30 year old investment and advisory firm. From 2000 to 2005, she was a Venture Partner with TVM Capital GmbH, one of the first and largest venture capital firms in Germany. She sourced and invested in three companies and built out their San Francisco office.

She was a co-founder and President of Sequenom, Inc., a DNA sequencing company which went public on Nasdaq in 2000, and wrote the first business plans for IDEC and Insight Vision, as a consultant to Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, and for ReSound, with Dr. Rodney Perkins, the founder. She was the first biotech analyst on Wall Street for Drexel Burnham and Merrill Lynch. She was the creator of two important conferences, The BioTech Meeting in Laguna Nigel and The Biopharmaceutical Conference in Europe. She and Cynthia Robbins Roth started the publication BioVenture View, which became the first online newsletter about biotechnology.

Ms. Masterson is Chairwoman of the Board of Directors of Repros Therapeutics Inc. and serves on the Board of Directors of Generex Biotechnology Inc. She serves on the Audit Committee and Compensation Committee of both companies. She is Chairwoman Emeritus of the BayBio Institute, a non-profit organization serving the Northern California life sciences industry by focusing on best practices, entrepreneurship, workforce development and science education, and also serves on the Board of Advisors to Astia, a non-profit organization dedicated to advancing women entrepreneurs. She also is on the Board of Advisors of the Professional Women's Healthcare Alliance and of BioAgenda. She is a graduate of the Stanford Law School Board of Directors College course.

In 2003, she was included in Irish America magazine's annual "Business 100" and received the Alumni Achievement Award from Marymount College at Fordham University in 2004.

About First Warning SystemsFirst Warning Systems, (FWS) founded in 2008, is based in Reno, NV. FWS's principal shareholder is Lifeline Biotechnologies, Inc (OTC Market: LLBO). FWS holds the exclusive development, manufacturing and marketing worldwide license from Lifeline, to commercialize the intellectual property. The FWS product line is a device and process that detects breast tissue abnormalities leading to health risk assessment and management and potentially, breast cancer. Three clinical trials with over 650 participants have achieved proof of concept and superior outcomes when compared to other diagnostic protocols. FWS is planning a final, limited clinical trial and a 510k device classification to validate the fourth generation of the FWS product. FWS is preparing to apply for a Euro CE Mark to market in the UK, EU and Russia markets. See FWS' video, "Breast Cancer Tumor Progression" at http://www.firstwarningsystems.com

For more information, contact: Jim Holmes,CEO 775-852-3222 jholmes@firstwarningsystems.com

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Key Medical Device Executive Joins Breast Cancer Technology Business Advisory Board, Nola Masterson

Friendswood grads to be honored at Distinguished Alumni event

Former Friendswood graduates Nilofer Azad, MD, and Blake Svejokovsky will be honored by the Friendswood Education Foundation and the FHS Alumni Association at the 2012 Distinguished Alumni Banquet on October 18.

After graduating from Friendswood High School in 1993, Dr. Nilofer graduated from The University of Texas at Austin and attended medical school at Baylor College of Medicine. She is currently a Medical Oncologist and Principal Investigator with the Sidney Kimmel Comprehensive Cancer Center and an Assistant Professor at Johns Hopkins University in Maryland. She specializes in the care of colorectal cancer patients and has extensive experience in the design and implementation of oncology clinical trials.

Nilo was the leader of our first State Champion Academic Decathlon Team. She really had it all, said Pepper Smith, who coached the team, and is a longtime teacher at Friendswood High School. She was beyond intelligent; she was competitive; she was committed; and she did everything with such grace, integrity, and humility.

Svejokovsky is a 1981 graduate of Friendswood High School. Svejokovsky graduated from Texas A&M University in 1985 with a degree in mechanical engineering and has been involved in the snack-food conveyor industry his entire professional life. After stints at Frito-Lay and Triple/S Dynamics, he is now a product handling manager with Heat & Control, Inc. in Carrollton, Texas. His name appears on nine U.S. patents.

Azad and Svejokovsky will be honored at the Annual Distinguished Alumni Banquet presented by the Friendswood Education Foundation and the FHS Alumni Association. Two other Alumni also will be honored, including Steven Jamail (1998) and Elaine Eitelbach Penton (1974), and former FISD Superintendent Walter Wilson will be recognized with the Honorary Distinguished Alumni award.

We are so pleased to be honoring these five individuals, who each have had tremendous accomplishments, said Trish Hanks, FISD Superintendent. The impact they have had on Friendswood is one that will last for many years.

The Distinguished Alumni Banquet will be held Thursday, October 18, at the Green Event Center in Friendswood. The reception begins at 7:30 p.m., with dinner and the program at 8 p.m. Tickets are $45 and can be purchased at the FISD Administration Building at 302 Laurel in Friendswood. For more information, call (281)482-1267.

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Friendswood grads to be honored at Distinguished Alumni event

People’s Pharmacy: Statin interaction proved fatal

Q: At age 71, my mother was taking medicine for diabetes, high cholesterol and a few other conditions. Her doctor changed her statin drug but didn't modify the dose.

Within a few months, she lost the ability to move from the neck down and was in the hospital going through test after test after test. I started looking into her meds and discovered the reason for her rhabdomyolysis: The effect of the more potent statin was eight times higher than it should have been. This was in part because it interacted with other medications she was on.

She was in the hospital for three months. After she got out, she survived at home for just six more months.

A: Rhabdomyolysis is a potentially fatal reaction in which the muscles break down and the kidneys fail. Older people may be particularly susceptible to such rare but dangerous side effects from statins. We are so sorry to learn that your mother suffered this deadly consequence.

Statin drugs vary in their potency. More powerful statins are generally prescribed at lower doses. Some statins interact with other medications and require dosage adjustment. Lower doses of simvastatin are needed, for example, when people are also taking blood-pressure medicines such as amlodipine, diltiazem or verapamil or a heart drug such as amiodarone.

Q: Getting off Cymbalta is challenging but not impossible. I experienced lightheadedness, dizziness and "brain zaps." These felt like being able to hear my eyes move. It sounded like the lightsabers on "Star Wars" very strange and disconcerting.

The key is to reduce the dosage very, very slowly. Take the capsules apart and begin by removing 5 or 10 of the tiny balls inside. Do this for a week or so, then slowly increase the amount you remove each week or two as you can tolerate it.

Your doctor may not be of any help. Mine wasn't. He instructed me to wean off over a two- to three-week period, and I almost lost my mind. I did it myself over a year or more.

A: We appreciate your detailed description of how you got off Cymbalta (duloxetine). The Food and Drug Administration does not require manufacturers of antidepressants such as citalopram, duloxetine, paroxetine, sertraline or venlafaxine to provide detailed instructions on gradual withdrawal. We think this is a serious oversight, since "discontinuation syndrome" is common and challenging.

Q: I have developed an addiction to crushed ice in the past year. I crave it and consume three to four huge cups of ice a day. One of my friends said my body must be missing something it needs, and that's what is causing this problem. Do you have any suggestions?

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People's Pharmacy: Statin interaction proved fatal